OCR Text |
Show Steel Demand To Hold Up .rvn nan lllli command a staff of 15 persons which make up- the "Berg fam- V : ily." was Mr. Metcalf born in Springville, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice S. Metcalf. "He is the grandson of a prominent Springville pioneer, Alexander Robertson, who came to Springville from Scotland in 1850 and served as city councilman and mayor for 10 years. A graduate of Springville. High and the LDS Seminary there, Mr. Metcalf attended Brigham Young University for two years, served in the U. S. Navy and attended Met-cal- . ( Market Quotations prere-cessio- peaks. San Francisco College of Mortuwe If have a strike that lasts in he finished Science where ary the top five per cent of his class. more than six weeks, consumers He is licensed embalmer and fu- will start using steel at a slow neral director under Utah State rate. After six weeks, inventories will have fallen from 22 million & A Furnished by J law. Hogle to around 12 million, and tons Co Member, New Yors Stock Mr. Metcalf is active in church N University and civic activities. He is first they'll be out of balance. Exchange, 35 Ave vice president of the 20-3-0 Club of Springville and is superintendent of the MIA, Springville Fifth SALT LAKE STOCK EXCHANGE Asked: Ward. He is membership comYesterdays Close: . Bid: 15.50 14.75 Banner mittee chaiAnan of the Spring.19 .20 Bristol Silver ville Chamber of Commerce and F. .21 .22 Bullion Monarch By 1.70 1.65 is a member of the Utah State Cardiff .'. T03Va Central Standard '... .03 Funeral Directors Association. :60 .55 ........ Cheif Con . . . . .21 .20 Ken married the, former BevClayton Silver .07 .07 2 Comwlth Ld .05 ... .06 Combined Metals erly Robbins of Springville. They li .07 Comstock . 07 Vz have five children. A new AMERICAN FORK .29 Cons Eureka . . . . . . . .27 ' Grand Opening Held A. ... 9 By ROBERT G. SHORTAL Dairy Event more convenient location," - said 1959 observTheme for Mr, Harris. "Our new quarters ance of June Utah's Montn will Dairy have been renovated and repaintMeal Ideas be Best "June's ' ed." y"; ;;v with Dairy Foods," Richard The company has complete Start G. .Steven? said Saturday, (Dick) service for hearing aids and Mr. is chairman Stevens general and has added addi of in of the committee charge tional testing facilities. It has state the observances throughout five different lines of hearing aids. are under way for one "Plans to Mr. there Harris, According are now five stores in the com-- , of the most outstanding dairy the Salt Lake, Ogden, .Sugar observances in the historyof "Alpany said. Mr. Stevens ' House, Idaho . Falls, Boise ,and state', Provo. for Logan and 'Mrs. Violet Parry is .recep- been scheduled 'several and Provo, major Dairy tionist at the Provo office. Month events are in the- making for Salt Lake' City and Ogden. Among events being planned in various .areas "of the state are civic luncheon salutee, county Dairy Princess contests, demon strations, and other events." ' Mr. Stevens noted that approxi f ' ', Nonagricultural employment yd. mately 30 per cent of Utahns Utah and Idaho is up approxi- diet comes from dairy foods, and mately five per cent over1958' s that the total value of the state's levels, and unemployment is down annual dairy farm production is some 23 per cent. approximately $40 million. That is the report of Frst Security Bank's Few s'' Letter' which Nichols, Provo, First S e c u r i t y will be distributed this week, it Bank vice president in charge of was announced Monday by F. V.' central division. ac-.'sscr- ies ; ' ' j ' ' - - oyment Up In Utah, Idaho f . . SfocIcMw Values To Historic Highs Theme Set For June . reports. Here's why demand will hold: Big users like the automotive, appliance, furniture, and farm equipment industries are at peak production. Their demands won't increase. Steel requirements for construction, pipelines, and the oil country will probably rise during the summer, but vacation shutdowns in other industries will offset the gains. So metalworking will probably d) much better in the third quarter than originally expecte d, whether or not there is a steel strike. With two-- ' exceptions (employment and some capital goods)" n th economy has regained 9 Along Wall Street APRIL 19, 1959 Utah County. Utah SUNDAY, Strike or not, metalworking will use 6 million to 6.5 million tons of The Littlefield has finished steel a month during the moved from 108 W.Company Center to a third quarter. That's about the new ground floor .location at 59 current rate of consumption, and E. Centei, according to Robert E. it's unlikely that we'll see a Harris, manager. change of pace, Steel magazine "We have triple the space in the Berg Opens Mortuary At Springville; Manager Named The new Berg Mortuary of Springville, now open for public use, is the result of many years of planning, according to Max Berg, president of the institution. "We now have three mortuaries in Orem, Provo and Springville he said. "We are happy to announce the f, appointment of Kenneth R. native of Springville, as manager of the new institution, Mr. Berg said. Mr. Metcalf will have at his SUNDAY HERALD Hearing Aids Firm Moves to New Location - . -- . in March hit a new peak and is ion Carbide 83,i and Stauffer 9V4. rising again this month. .First quarter earnings' were sensational in some cases, with Du Pont re-- , porting its net xip, 70 per cent from a year . ago. Auto sales spurted and production schedules ' were increased. Steel production hit a new peak. United Press International NEW YORK (UPD The stock market staged a spectacular rally this week that sent the averages to historic highs and added more than $8,600,000,000 to market values. Stocks advanced in every' session with the sharpest gains coming on Thursday . and Friday. The upsurge was led by the "blue chips." American Telephone was the individual star but Du Pont, General Motors, General Electric, U. S. Steel, Texas Co., and Standard Oil (New Jersey), also chipped in with strong sup- - . port. . . Harris Intertyoes was up 8' 2, Gulf Oil ,6, Colgate 5i, Warner I ambert and American ' Home more Products than each, 4 Yoi'ngstown Sheet & Tube 5 and . hirrh priced Superior Oil of Cali-f- n, T5 - points. ' Bell' & Howell The only cloud on the economic fP t. added ., horizon was the failure of the Dov-JonP- s The s' steel companies and United weekly averages of America to reach any showed industrials up, 18.09 points c kind of common meeting ground on the vrcok to a hw of 624.05. was the It for their upcoming negotiations, high sharpest American Telephone, usually a weekly gain since the week ended e narrow mover, soared on Thurs- Dec. 7, 1956. The previous in the industrial averages, day and Friday. Stockholders on high was 614.69, set on March 13. a three Wednesday approved The railroad average rose 5.8.1. one split and the: company exabout the points to 163.92 the best weekly optimism pressed gain since Sept. ',19, 1958 and the future. The 'old" stock jumped 158 utilities added 063 to 93.22. The 65; stocks used iti the three, averpoints to 2638 a new high since e 1930. The new stock, which will ages closed at 214.86 a new 5.63 of a on top point s, gain replace the old shares when the ihp work bestock split becomes effective, exThe dp.ity: average voluir gan trading on a when issued "3,5G5,328to from shares basis. It opened on Thursday at panded 3,123,222 the week before, when 84 and closed Friday at 88-the market declined. Thiokol, which announced .higher first quarter earnings and reBecause of its poorly developed vealed it is discussing a merger with Marquardt Aircraft; climbed nervous system, a fish probably discomfort rather 143,4 points. Chas. Pfizer, rose 14U, experiences Allied Chemical spurted V 2, Un j Steel-worker- fjll-tim- . i all-tim- , railroads, responding to increased carloading and good March earnings, scored some sharp gains. Brokers felt the rails the recent market laggards-d-id more than anything else to set the stage for boomlet. Increased Activity Activity increased sharply on the upswing, which was a bullish factor behind the market. The industrial avVrage dosed e the week at a new high. to new a rose The rails average-hig- h The , all-tim- since Aug. 10, 1956. economic news was very favorable. Industrial production The -- all-tim- - ! 8. 'Laundercenter' Croff Dragon .............. .70 East Standard . ......: .10 .22 Fast Utah Eureka Bullion . ... . . .05 Va Eureka Lilly Con .... .08 Eureka Standard ... .25 Ot. Western ....... .05 .50 Kennebec .04 2 Majestic Oil ........ .35 Mammoth Mtn. States Dev. ... .02 '3 Naildriver 122 ...... , . I. . 2.00 W 1.00 ' North Lily North Standard ...... .0134 .02 V4 Park Konold ...... Park Nelson ....... .10 . - -. . ....... A t -- Park City Con . .06 i .09 Prosper .24 SUver King West .03 Silver Shield .19 So. Standard ....... .25 Swansea Con 1.85 Tar Baby .80 Tintic Standard Utah Wyoming ...... .60 11 West Toledo . . . . . Williston ........... The Springville Mortuary, designed by architect Willard Nel .11 . .23 son, is a blend of contemporary 06 V2 utility, and traditional dignity .10 The use of native stone, brick .30 y.05i3 and fine woods gives the build .55 04 ',4 ing a simple elegance. .33 Present facilities include public .02V .14 room which may be used for 2.1212 small and private funerals and 1.05 .02 which - provide a comforting at .021a mosphere in which to meet .12 The. building has a 06i3 friends. .10 different foyer and charmingly .27 .03 12 finely appointed rest rooms. .21 The sweeping front canopy jand .35 1.95 . broad cemented parking plaza .85 give easy access. A rear parking .70 .13 lot and covered parking area give .16 .06 .0512 6712 3 Day-Ni- te Laundercenter has just been completed at 355 E. State Road in American Fork and is now open to the public. This new service is open 24 hours a day and is equipped with the latest modern conveniences in washing and drying action. Howard B. Brown, a resident of Lehi, with his wife Beth and three children, Patricia 15, Russell 13, and Stephen 9, have considered this a family project and will all APPL ANCE A Va-.1- .04Va Zuma ' SALES: Bullion Mon, 1000 at .22 Cardiff. 100 at 1.70 Chief Cons, 100 at 55 - assist in its operation. The grand opening of the center was held Saturday. (R-N.Y- .) ' Clayton SI. 500 at .20 (SI DtTQ mwmmmm IMmo maasim Qxsofe Qmssii P 0 DJ LTQ mm J LTD C D tTQ kj 1 v r c ci TY 3:1 FRIGIDAIRE. I I t SfS "r Z2 u 3 era T in n nn i .for the unused service remaining in your present appliance on any modem family-siz- e FRIGIDAIRE appliance. ' , . We realty meed- your present operating appliance . . . many - NO TRICKS! NO GIMMICKS! Here's how our PLAN works to your advantage . buyers are waiting! You wouldn't think of keeping your car until it was completely worn out -- worthless as a trade in so why keep your present appliances until their value disappears? They will never be worth more than right now! ' TRUE-VAL- UE klJq If you will give us the name, age, size and condition Of your ent operating appliance . . . well give you an honest TRUE-VALU- E appraisal! Then, if acceptable, we'll actually pay yoa mn YEARB I 0 u ai vu u"fli u "BBKHBBSi3 TRUE-VALU- ne PAX Application Kills Crab Grass i mismm mm fVMSGBBj E Our honest tow prices; less a TRADE-I- N gives you the lowest net price! OOO Your present operating appliance will be completely recondt- tioned in our factory-approvreconditioning center, then sold on our sales floor as a TESTED AND GUARANTEED ed RECONDITIONED S APPLIANCE! 1 .fl Rcarch reports Just released reveal a h in control of major crab grass Lawns applied with PAX " 1 1: V - 1 1 1 I AWN TO FRIGIDAIRE with a later model trade in. Big, d, 8 to 10 yr. old, EVEN LESS OR CONTROLS CHICK WEED, Hecent reports also confirm PAX as chick-weefe positive control for mouse-ea- r speedwell and Euphorbia. PAX may be applied anytime tor control of these weeds. an popular make refrigerator in A--l operating condition. $(o)(o) EUPHORBIA & OTHER WEEDS PAX beautifies your lawn by supply Ing one normal feeding of nitrogen plant food. Encourages desirable grasses to spread and build a thick turf.; M i .!. . with , FERTILIZE YOUR NEW BEAUTY fow(UAMr as little as ii rr ami efi iioK rrvfteo freo. These results are confirmed by leading universities and thousands of homeowners inthbarea -- i break-throug- tMMM i 1 AVf:Jlir JhOGieSft S1 LTD J No fictitious list prices! No phony discount offers! ecfo . . . 1 Dm URGES LOTTERY POLL NEW YORK (UPD Rep. Paul to A. Fino convenience 1 I J) urged Thursday that Census director Robert W. flower cars. poll Americans on the Future development of the mor Burgess of a national lottery question tuary calls for the addition of a when heads are counted in the 1960 census. chapel to seat ioo persons. and protection .05 YOU CAN DEPEND ON OUR SERVICE urtBTU . . C. family-siz- e SHEER LOOK REFRIGERATOR 9.1 as. ft. capacity. Big, across-the-to- p Big Storage Door with special Decp-Sbe-lf f Freezer Chest Storage Big Porcelain Enamel Ghde-OHydrator i -FRIGIDAIRE YEAR WARRANTY plus ut MUST BE. APPLIED NOW CONTROLS SOIL PESTS, TOO Apply PAX now before crab grass seeds germinate. Crab grass is an annual that dies each Winter leaving millions of seeds. PAX kills these seeds and those .that blow in from neighbors lawns for years. Thus, a PAX control program ends forever the continuing task of digging or spraying to remove PAX kills lawn moth larvae (sod web worms), cutworms, earwigs, grubs, ants, night crawlers and most other lawn damaging soil pests. . the growing weed. Be safe. Apply PAX now. r - j 4 4iiii UM BUILT GUARANTEED RESULTS Moci SS-9-5- 9 roa your I I KINO Of appliance appraisai come in true-vaiu-e AmiANd ,: j Mooa I I TMt CONDITION AMD or mail this coupon iRAND. '. ' MODCt YEAH. Of MY. NAME. AND BACKEt) BY GENERAL f,1" PHONE MOTORS PAX is guaranteed to give 90 to 100 crab grass control when used according to directions. - - ! I PROTECTION PLAN AR .rHONt. FR APPLIANCE CO.-1- 20 NO. UNIVERSITY AVENUE l ; PHONE FR 3-27- 64 GOABfMSS ANGib Co. AND SOIL PEST ; COUTBOL , a zmm mm mmm &mm &mm hi : i i m In if X Niiimmiim j a I EASY - - - EASY TERMS . YOU CAN DEPEND ON OUR SERVICE AVtNUE 120 NORTH UNIVERSITY 1 ! I |